The evening world. Newspaper, April 24, 1918, Page 1

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eae = os . RAMEN, 2.0. me _— Stee ee RRR WEL. WEATHER—Fair and cooler. a “ r ‘Books ry ven to All,’”’ f “ Circulation Books Open to All.’ | “Circulation F . aes : P18, by The Press Poblishin 18 PAGES PRICE ‘Two CENTS. WRAL LAR Two CENTS. "Coprtent 4038 em Kore Wd . NEW YORK, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 24, 1918. mansine ee ae) ne MT.VERNONGIRIS Mother of Girls Under Fi ve a N SUPER GbN, ja ZeEBRUGGE oe MASSED INFANTRY FIGHTING AT SEICHEPREY READY FOR FRACTION British Ships Bottling Up Submarine Bases Dashed Through Hail of Seventeen-Inch Gladys and Irene Mcintyre Monster May Be Be ake Shells—Thrilling Story of Raid. Serve Coffee and Doughnuts Cannon Ordered Built by LONDON, April 24.—Not only was the mouth of the canal at as Shells Fall, Navy Department. Zeebrugge blocked, but British sailors and marines who participated in . ae, . 7 the raid an the German submiarine bases at Zeebrugge and Ostend believe Fro: 19-YEAR-OLD BOY A HERO PHILADELPHIA, April 24 tle twa dig cs cesar ent scuunten tn toe ne Strong Attacks on Entire Line m test engine o! es tion ty estroyed every gun ¢ ne wOle, GEMOlSe S > Ov suerte 2 GEE ea ll ie ba al athed inthe Albert to Avre Below the Somme David Griggs Passes Through haa yet been produced in artillery by its entire length and blew up large stores of munitions containe F Seven Barrages Carr ying jthe great war will move out of one | sheds, according to stories given by the survivors and on Both Sides of Lawe = Sl . pda aol drench editing FB. Until they ithin a half mile of the harbor of Zeebrugge no : : Ammunition, Delaware River to-morrow morning.” Jnl they were within 3 ai 5 Pana Ri ver in Flanders. eens This statement by Samuel M. Vau- | ching in the attacking force had picked up the light on the Mole. The) . DAS SAN ARMY IN nin, Vice President and General by 1s of ‘ PRINCE Tin 38 (Assos ‘Manager of the Baldwin Locomotive | attacking ship which started for the Mole followed t Pron cal WITH THE BRITISH ARMY IN FRANCE, April 24 (A\ day: 2 cle 880- . . Works, 1s the official announcement ck” he shi companies of the escorting fleet outsid | 6 ated Press).—The shell torn village hese Aonesiea's enercanin' (seabed “Good Luck” from the ships’ comp a SCOLAS ep iated Press).—The Germans began a heavy bombardment of the of Seicheprey, around which centred Vauclain, who ts Chairman of the the harbor had scarcely got within sight of the light when it was discov- Be itish positions in the Somme sector this morning, and the latest the hardest fighting in connection {Sub-committee on Army and Navy cred by the Germans. Star shells instantly pierced the thick haze, SHOW: | soporte site tan attach Is in progress. with the recent heavy German attack |Artillery of the Council of Natlonal fe hs F i mA besa dayilehe tha on the American positions, appcars Defense, added that “the entire en-| ig up the cruiser as clearly as though it had been daylight Northwest of Albert (above the Somme) early to-day eneaty to bo destined to hold @ proud place) ase consid be Racca ny a paibee pyoond ne Be Be es |troops which advanced from their trenches for an assault were . e +Datte in th eighborhood ad cou. st} a in the story of American participation | 4 within ten weeks’ time” : sd i si ei y ae elke GAS SHEL. ATTACKS driven back by the Byitish fire. sl deat oe ona}! centrated its fire o ser. in the world war. As further details Besides vouchsafing tho additional Tse Ena: wak sik icol wat aheae ae KEPT UP BY GERMANS (The Mine at whick the German infantry ts again being thrown of the engagement become known, Information that the slide-gutters of ’ ‘ bee a ha atte: sspiéat of Acnices 1408 there are disclosed deeds which are} concrete welgh seventy-five tons \of those watching her understood ON LORRAINE FRONT extends from tho district north of rt, northeast of Am: 1. fully {n accord with the finest Ameri. | apiece, Vauclain would not Ko Into) Great seventeen-inch shells and Avre River, southeast of the city, The British line links up with the a . gc h rrea r rn ————- --- ¥ | im Coralie of the ereAk cannon others of smaller calibre flew around French at the River Luce, about three miles north of the Avre. can traditions, 4 It was announced some weeks azo Slight Incre in Rifle and Machine The correspondent ts now permitted | hat the Navy Department was her Uke hall, Sho was apparently |* Gun Fi . AOU re tual cance | (It has seemed probable the Germans would again strike here, as to tell of a few cases of individual bulding a gun that would have a hit by some of the smaller ones, but aun 6 § round $ i | the advance of their right flank in the Amiens region was stopped heroism, which will convey an idea range of 105 miles. Whether there | sie plugged ahead and was seen to Artillery Fire Light short by the stroug British resistance at Albert, lugging far behind t ut | y tion between that and b - 7 AR a 4s to the mettle of the men, Ono} the ran thet has bese anighed way {ture the corner of ee Fis EMO] WITH THE AMERICAN ARMY IN| their left, which was rushed at Castel to within a short distance of as us! 45 the kecor 4h arbor. The Ger- | pw “5 22 s of them, David Griggs of East Hamp-| not indicated. ‘ ¥ erie Me ral. waa detlecteg |PRANCE, Tuesday, April 23 (Asnoct the Paris-Amtens Rallway.) ton, Conn., passed through the enemy from her vital parts by tho inter- ao iiss) oT . oe SES ae A German bombardment of the British positions on both barrage at least seven times to carry AMERICAN WHO HELPED | ening structure of the Mole and|fall slong the American front north-| J 4g DIN Ta Oto the north of Bethune) in Flandess ee ammunition to his hard-pressed com- FIRE FIRST SHOT KILLED 2" of the damage done was above|west of out to-day, but ete y thayuinat'4 giclock (lai Ridwuing,. A large saction oF halite i Swioe partially buried | the waterline. aking tho artillery fire was lighter , j oA ee ‘ ‘ des. 2 gatas yok pectd ee 9646406660%600 ce J |GERMANS BOLT FROM THEJtian usual. ‘There was a light in-|front is seething, although the definite dimensions of the infantry y earth rne\ y shel . . . 7 ail around him, but he kept at his _ > Lieut. Ayer, Dartmouth Graduate, ; shasta odd delete srea, {Te 1 rifle and machine gun fire action are not yet known. q ; | ‘et Sy | Disregarding ail that had bappered, | against the American positions around thwest of Merville (southwest of Ha: task. Shells Destroyed Wagon Load | KISSED IN AN ELEVATOR, Lost Life in Action on |the crulser went up to the Molo and | seicheprey, Nor! His ( Hazebrouck), a large Griggs, who ts nineteen years old,| o¢ Doughnuts but Misses SUES HOTEL FOR $10 000) April 20, Jianded a large party of bluc jackets A German taker vier east of the | Concentration of German soldiers was dispersed by the British Was so modest that he would not tell : val t es F FITCHBURG, Mass, April 24,—Sec-|and marines. Some of the Germans | Meusa died of his woun artillery. his story, but insisted on speaking of McIntyre Escaped. —_——— ond Lieut. Lawrence 8, Ayer of this| bolted enmasse from the nearest bat-| At one point three German propa- + , pointed h t and ia Calas ‘i ane Riche se h American sho e | British. ‘The guna were destroyed one lcoptes of the Gaztte des Ardennes, fie. coment Z Hee ey oe. Ong Misses Gladys and Irene ibaa hte more Conipany but They Declare |xiied in action on April 20, according | by one, while «thers in the landing | which Is printed in Fr neh 2 iguee aaa who played herote roles tn the recent They Were Not Responsible, to Information received here to-day bY | stety dealt with the shods and munl- | Raymond A. Ferris, of Medford,| %attles of American troops bed FYAnce:| pause an unknown man hugged} Mi wacte Willian Avs Sas jen |tlon stores with flame wera, . TWO U. S., FLYERS KILLED ABOVE AND BELOW THE SOMME Mass,, acting as a courier, was blown| are the daughters of Col. W. A. Mc-land kissed hor while she was in a Bilt- in’ 1918, was| Apparently under cover off the road twice by the concussion|Intyre of the Salvation Army, who|moro levator, M Eva Brayley and went t0/ operation the concrete-laden cruiners, IN BLAZING AIRPLANE of shells, Although stunned and near-| nay charge of tho organization's work | Gifford wants $10,000 from the hotel |with which It was Intended to bivel: 7 ’ . , y craaed by the intenslty of tho gun. | a ChATs® of the organtation’s work | corny, Das dn anndle nadermaieeay iEroUER Infantry Attacks Last Night and To-Day fire when he reached the point in the one ki aie bs : “ : 4 bai anne hotel people ais a mre mine *|the harbor, accompanied, as far as [jeut. Warner of M ap I, Follow Terrific Artillery Actions on rear of the lines to which he was| Whose home ph Moun ma nal piesa ea Ny PR t can be ascertained, by only oue ( * 7 af a gent for ammunition, ho carried out] girls’ mother told something of thelr] *torney. John Mekkim Minton, to-day D | CORaKihe) Aa Gnigeppronscad anal te neh 1) a Front of About Fifteen Miles. his orders, Then he asked for @ re-| careers to a reporter for The Evening | ment fen thin aaithout Bu x thate to ~ : entrance, they nehored, awang ex. | ; : . : volver, saying he wanted ” go out World, - pe oe te ie La Ww AaRINGT i . i tae Ena dacordiia wien FALLS. ‘Tex | LONDON, April 24.—From the Western batilefronts in Flande: and fight the Germans, But he faint-| ‘YF ol aervaedeciator agtatn sha lio the testimony of one’ of the ob-| Second Lleut, Atephen it. W ne] , santa i p 1 a anal: Ay TT ats aahausliole: When he ee Gladys is twenty-three years olf |Tved | ae Rotten eratae patna: t ate uid Lrieicmen natructor Reeeaad. Ste 4| and Pleardy reports come to-day of a renewal of German attacks, Ai gained consciousness his first words/and a graduate of Pratt Institute 1m /great tight and tol distress" suf Kel thves antnuten Cadet Edwin D. Cryer of 14 some point between Yyres and Hangard on the Amiens front the real new ere iry whether his mes- lyn,’ eald Mee, Mo . “Bhe|fered by Miss Gifford were more the rie arb pk ee ll | en [eat : 4 y were an inqu ry Whether his mes-| Brooklyn,” sald Mrs. Metntyre, “She | Praga I i than}, ial olde eh lee poco eT he destroyers 0 t Ca ir | offensive is likely to be developed at any momen | sage had been ? |worked in the Brooklyn Bureau of arat aoe | ia one of eo Alasiva uKinas oxpte aw chates he! when the iti 3 Charles Stnkler, a Philadelphia ‘ " a) ante RORY , hls ke. tha Givcivan Oke none Py Bota the British and French War Off announce strong attack | ie ; Charities and went to France last No- Gifford are lock to the Bru ana Wn ‘nh ana i | lawyer, who is now with the Red " red c w tes y aro believed to ‘ fell, Both bodies we lon the Franco-British fron which co | oss and was in the thick of the|Vember with a contingent of seven-|Surrel on Sep. 9 6 tind deft the ete tee te: Coben mfr : vel Meanwhile fou | itt . t ' “ | ating, told the correspondent to-|teen Salvation Army workers, 1M] qining room on 19th fboasibie to change trem heh A paca AS f | stitute ns or day of two Americans who, armed | charge of Adjutant Hammond. vena: walkie eleva od dle fend work the dogs. 1 to|* a es ig "GERMAN PLANE. DOWNED | Ano nemy assault |: wa t Albert secto: } only with automatic pistols, charged| «pnhey wer sent to a post where j | take part in the t rth of German infantry | trenches northwest j an enemy machine gun, killed eight! american troops were training, and | yi FOG AND SMOKE SCREENS IN AIR RAID ON PARIS t rt heir at m heavy Giro | Germans and captured the gun. It|in January, when the soldiers were | ‘EVEN THE BABIES FAT UP SHIELD WARSHIPS — | Albe t night. Their attack was met with heavy rifle ana io aleo related that one American|moyed to tho nes noar Toul, the |” | imitation fog and smoke f Three Is Ca { and ve gun fire, and they were driven back sharpehooter Riles Sfisen German Salvation Army workers were moved a | NEW LIBERTY LOAN BONDS; , oe DUROAARING WAt Attempted Attack From Albert the artillery attacks ext ward to the Valley or na villa c id} with them at the request of officers : th almost ea tad . | * inns front the the front lines Gladys and Irene/ phe girls were equipped with all the h ! Pee ¢ Scarpe River and on to Flanders in fr f McIntyre, sisters, of Mount Verno: MD, | soldiers’ outfit, including masks, hel ar at ¢ | DOW’ T WORRY! NOTHING LOST te Britt PARI A ¢ ne| Hethune, main objective on the original drive in the N. ¥, Salvation Army representa-|mets and revolvers Labia ah ne mS y an t ete , was broug i . trong German attacks also developed last t yves, during the height of the en-| “Irene is twenty-six, a graduate of | #4¥ing as he did Give me a | F ake te quae | in. th ken y ( Dae en einen " gagement handed out to the soldiers| Mount Holyoke and until bon bmnarrleas it 4, Vou a\Ne rir rald. { Dranoutre, on the Flanders front, half way be offeo, chocolate, doughnuts and} oarly this year = n editor int | . 258 caters | att w 1 mel, but were pepsin » by | troops f yuch good cheer, They went on with] 4 publishing hou: nester. The| front, Tt te mu 4 enter. | ‘ ! U r r e p ; iy ihe h and Frenct Hery | thetr work while the shella were fall-| frst woek of Man ant to tats Aer § vicos| upon | 1 a ci ie . : j : Soe | ig all around them and would not! prance with another Salvation Army|for th 1a ut of the 1 s A : ere Bal sp | eave until at last they were ordered | contingent and was sent to the same} supp! ughau 1 ' an and paid dow 4 Date : to do 80, Now they are called} puilding that Gladys occupied. The|da f | Jep mt ! were k a HE } ‘Daughters of the Regiments.” Miss] sisters havo 1 working togeth One ir " F lw 14 al or Oat Ha ; i 4 | We want to go back to our boys ho last we heard of the girls they | with " f doughnu A w sat loned ‘th j rhey are the finest fellows in the| were at Ansauville, In lebruary al whict kf 1 . grea t M Mis lag _ — } world, not afraid anything. Any | despatch was received here which satd | an a ¢ a has ar break at mo ACh Pita an peor Re ae tied OD Mu t |z oi : . Infantry Attacks Above Albert and on Flanders em. ng to hear them | travelled over # vhell-torn r ander | cape ; te thd 3 ay : | i Hiled with enthu- | fire to decorate with flowers the graves | > A 1 of Bi r (Con i Gee Front Repulsed With Losses to Enemy. and mination to fight to|of some American soldiers, Gladys was| THE WORLD TRAVEL BUABAD, ASS as ) = eg I ee re | r A, 63-6) Park Row, N, City, to go home, but not until the victory | Miss Cora Van Norde laughter of a s A Sg pastel H VI i. ; TLL A the text of tuad a) Ab been won. When there is a full! former New York banker.” eh ee, eel news, Tae, the woman with t UG TS, P G : : be LONDON, April 24,—Followi the text of the statement issued enches they come to our vil-| Mrs. McIntyre said there are now | ead @outh American Gleamahip Lines, Traveller’ an ba Ami a » Page pi ben dh Re tn-day by the War Office: im She rene five contingents, about 100 workers,| gue tad Sener crtere for mls, Check teem | & Woman with & frisky fox torrier EN RIES, Page Bf! 2p tatevette: Mecda: silane ne Aen ; | | (Continued on Fourth Page.) in the Balvation Army forces at the Beniomae 6600, —26r | baby. ( accident ‘The hostile artillery activity increased yesterday aftemoon and |

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